2020-03-28_Techlife_News

(Darren Dugan) #1

As job losses mount, some economists say the
nation’s unemployment rate could approach
13% by May. By comparison, the highest jobless
rate during the Great Recession, which ended in
2009, was 10%.


The economic deterioration has been swift. As
recently as February, the unemployment rate was
at a 50-year low of 3.5%. And the economy was
growing steadily if modestly. Yet by the April-June
quarter of the year, some economists think the
economy will shrink at its steepest annual pace
ever — a contraction that could reach 30%.


Many people who have lost jobs in recent days
have been unable to file for unemployment aid
because state websites and phone systems have
been overwhelmed by a crush of applicants
and have frozen up. That logjam suggests that
Thursday’s report on filings for unemployment
benefits actually understates the magnitude of
job cuts last week.


With layoffs surging, a significant expansion of
unemployment benefits for the millions who will
lose jobs as a result of the coronavirus outbreak
was included in an economic relief bill nearing
final approval in Congress. One provision in the
bill would provide an extra $600 a week on top
of the unemployment aid that states provide.
Another would extend 13 additional weeks of
benefits beyond the six months of jobless aid
that most states offer.


Separate legislation passed last week provides
up to $1 billion to states to enhance their ability
to process claims. But that money will take time
to be disbursed.


Jessy Morancy of Hollywood, Florida, was
laid off Friday from her job as a wheelchair
attendant and customer service agent at Fort

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